Palau has operated a prolific commemorative coin program since the early 1990s, contracting production almost entirely to European mints — primarily in Austria and Germany — while maintaining nominal issuing authority under Palauan law. The country uses the U.S. dollar as its actual currency, so these large silver pieces circulate nowhere and exist purely as collector objects licensed through the government.
The Seoul issue belongs to a city-series format that has become a recurring commercial vehicle for several Pacific island issuers over the past decade. KM#1037 places it within a catalog that now runs to four-digit reference numbers — a figure that speaks to the sheer volume of Palauan commemorative output since independence in 1994.
Palau has operated a prolific commemorative coin program since the early 1990s, contracting production almost entirely to European mints — primarily in Austria and Germany — while maintaining nominal issuing authority under Palauan law. The country uses the U.S. dollar as its actual currency, so these large silver pieces circulate nowhere and exist purely as collector objects licensed through the government.
The Seoul issue belongs to a city-series format that has become a recurring commercial vehicle for several Pacific island issuers over the past decade. KM#1037 places it within a catalog that now runs to four-digit reference numbers — a figure that speaks to the sheer volume of Palauan commemorative output since independence in 1994.